Jennifer Aniston Building 2,000-Square-Foot Closet in LA Home

Former "Friends" star Jennifer Aniston is reportedly planning on building a 2,000-square-foot closet in her luxurious Bel-Air home, large enough to fit all of her other former sitcom co-stars.

E! News reported that permits filed with the Los Angeles Building and Safety Department by the actress will allow her to convert her garage into the massive closet, complete with a powder room, for an estimated $60,000.

"Oh, you have a walk-in closet? How cute. Jennifer Aniston's new boudoir is 2,000 square feet," wrote E! News writer Cinya Burton. "Apparently after two decades in Hollywood (and hundreds of red carpet events) the 'We're the Millers' actress has racked up quite the wardrobe. One so massive she needs a department store-like area to display it all."

Aniston's digs, which she shares with fellow actor Justin Theroux, is worth $21 million, according to the Daily Mail. The newspaper said that she recently sold two New York apartments for $6.5 million after deciding to stay in Los Angeles instead of living on the East Coast, leaving her a few bucks to work on her Bel-Air fixer upper.

E! News reported that according to court permit records, Aniston has expanded the master bedroom, including a new deck with a trellis, added a cantilever roof eave, removed a trellis and installed roof covers outside of the living room, dining room and library since December 2012.

According to E! News, the actress also plans to install a water feature with a recessed black lava veneer around newly constructed concrete stairs that flows into a pond.

E! News reported that when it's all said and done, the couple would have added 4,000 square feet to the already 8,500-square-foot estate.

Aniston just completed "Horrible Bosses 2," which is set for release on Nov. 26. Theroux is starting in the new haunting HBO series "The Leftovers," which premieres on Sunday, about a town where a number of its residents disappear at once.

"Justin Theroux, who until 'The Leftovers' has been sorely underutilized as a lead actor, stars as Kevin Garvey, the police chief of Mapleton, New York, a small town still coming to grips with a global crisis," wrote the Washington Post's Hank Stuever. "Three years earlier, on Oct. 14, one in every 50 or so people randomly vanished in a single instance – a total of 2 percent of global population."